History Facts
Fun facts about History for Kids. Interesting factoids, information and answers. So let’s have some fun and why not learn something new.
- In Ancient Greece, if a woman watched even one Olympic event, she was executed.
- Attila the Hun bled to death from a nosebleed on his wedding night.
- The flu killed over 20 million people in Spain from 1918 to 1919.
- Julius Caesar wore a laurel wreath to cover the onset of baldness.
- When Albert Einstein died, his last words died with him. The nurse close to him did not understand German.
- The shortest war in history was between Zanzibar and England in 1896. Zanzibar surrendered after 38 minutes.
- Abraham Lincoln was shot with a Derringer.
- The White House, in Washington DC, was originally gray, the color of the sandstone it was built out of.
- The US federal income tax was first enacted in 1862 to support the Union’s Civil War effort.
- The dollar was established as the official currency of the US in 1785.
- The total number of Americans killed in the Civil War is greater than the combined total of Americans killed in all other wars.
- The very first bomb dropped by the Allies on Berlin during World War II killed the only elephant in the Berlin Zoo.
- On August sixth, 1945, during World War Two, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing an estimated 140,000 people in the first use of a nuclear weapon in warfare.
- During the First World War, the punishment for homosexuality in the French army was execution.
- The peace symbol was created in 1958 as a nuclear disarmament symbol by the Direct Action Committee, and was first shown that year at peace marches in England.
- Only two people signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4th, John Hancock and Charles Thomson.
- The house in which the Declaration of Independence was written was replaced with a hamburger restaurant.
- Fourth of July fireworks have a long and honorable tradition. They were first used in July 1776 and may have been meant as a mockery of the tradition of fireworks for British royalty.
- Harry S. Truman was the last U.S. President with no college degree.
- William H. Taft was the first president to submit a national budget.
- The model for Uncle Sam on the famous 1917 post “I want you” is the face of the painter, James Montgomery Flagg.
- There is no such thing as the Congressional Medal of Honor.
- Like the Democratic donkey, the Republican party symbol was born out of mockery.
- Although the Red Cross isn’t a government agency, it does have a Congressional charter.